Another large supermarket announced hundreds of dismissal after Sainsbury said yesterday that it would reduce 3,000 head office staff roles.
Morrisons have said that they will cut 200 employees in a large company Shake Up.
The risky role is supposed to be in customer service, involvement of employees and payroll administration.
There are currently 497 Morrisons stores in the United Kingdom that see a total of more than 11 million customers per week
A spokesperson for Morrisons said that the company has carried out a 'review of its human structure' to ensure that it offers 'shops and sites and timely and consistent service'.
They added: 'We therefore propose to remove the roles from regional human manager, to keep people manager and case specialist from our structure, which means that colleagues in these roles run the risk of redundancy.
'The new structure will consist of a number of new central roles to support our supermarkets directly together with central HR support and additional roller relationship roles.
“Before definitive decisions are made, we will perform at least 45-day consultation process.”
Another large supermarket announced hundreds of dismissal after Sainsbury said yesterday that it would reduce 3,000 head office staff roles
Morrisons have said they will cut 200 employees in a large company Shake Up
It comes after the supermarket giant said that in November it would scale up the activities on his Rathbones Bakery, so that the production of specialized bakery products would be stopped and fewer products would make.
A deal of £ 2.5 billion in January 2024 saw the company sell 337 from its gas stations to help pay debts.
In another blow, Morrisons was overtaken by Aldi almost three years ago as the fourth largest supermarket chain in Great Britain.
It is after Sainsbury's announced yesterday that it closes his remaining cafés in the store as part of a large overhaul that will also see 3000 jobs learn.
Simon Roberts, Chief Executive of the Supermarket Group, said that the company made the cuts because it tries to lower the expenditure by £ 1 billion a year in the light of a 'particularly challenging cost environment'.
This despite the supermarket chain that recently announced its 'largest' Christmas trading period ever and predicting profit would probably be between £ 1.01 billion and £ 1.06 billion for the entire 2025.
The job losses mean that the current 148,000-copied workforce is reduced by 2 percent and all 61 remaining cafés are closed.
Sainsbury's has announced that it will reduce more than 3,000 jobs and is planning to close his remaining cafés in the store as part of a major overhaul
Simon Roberts, Chief Executive of the supermarket group, said he made the cutbacks as part of the company's attempts to reduce the expenses by £ 1 billion a year
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Mr. Roberts claimed that the shoppers from Sainsbury no longer regularly used their cafés, while food halls and concessions from their 'specialized partners' had grown in popularity in the shop.
As part of the Shake Up, the retailer will also close his remaining pastry, hot food and pizza satell layers in the store and move the most popular items from there to regular shopping paths.
The boss of the supermarket added: 'While we accelerate two and then of our strategy to the year, we are confronted with a particularly challenging cost environment, which means that we have to make difficult choices about where we can afford and where we do things Must do differently to make our company more efficient and effective.
“The decisions that we announce today are essential to ensure that we continue to continue our momentum, but have also meant a number of difficult choices that influence our dedicated colleagues in a number of parts of our company.”